Musings on our family life from the playas of Costa Rica to the woods of Maine to the coast of Oregon to infinity (and beyond!) using adverbs and exclamations freely for anyone missing us and wondering, "Where in the world...? or "What the heck is a yurt anyway?"
* All contents copyright Kelly Kittel

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Dear Kelly

Right.So it has been
a couple of months since I last posted a blog.Grab a cup of coffee and a comfy chair because this will be long.Been busy moving back onto Mohawk Drive
where, after four years of renters, everything I touched needed either cleaning
or repairing or both.Fortunately for
me, the military moved all of our tenants stuff except their cleaning
products.So, I have a random sample of
the cleaning products preferred by three American military families, which is
almost interesting.And even though it
seems questionable whether or not they ever actually used any of them while
they lived here, I now have a nice selection of scents with which to clean the
toilet.

As the dust has settled anew, the other thing I’ve been
preoccupied with is my writing.I have,
as you may or may not know, been trying to realize my dream of being a writer,
a published, paid author that is for I have, indeed, always written something,
whether it be emails or blogs or notes to teachers.(Or to myself.)I have had some considerable ass-in-chair
time over the past five years and, yes, my ass is distinctively more
chair-shaped than it used to be as proof.I’ve written and revised my manuscript countless times, queried 200
agents, pitched 20 agents in person, attended writing workshops and
conferences, worked with five editors, started one writing group, joined
another, and have had a couple handfuls of people read various iterations of my
manuscript.Because that is what it is
called—a manuscript.A manuscript dreams
of being a book when it grows up.

And in my spare time? I have been working on “The Platform.”No writer these days can simply write.Or drink and write. Or eat opium and write.
Or move to Paris and be bisexual and smoke Gauloises and commiserate with
starving painters who will be famous once they’re dead and live a bohemian
rhapsody lifestyle.And write. Not, that
is, if you want to reach the hallowed halls of publishing before you, too, are
dead.This busy little platform is so
important that many writers are actually out there, right now, studying
engineering and constructing little toothpick projects even before they have
written one single word of their book.The
modern day writer can not simply sit in front of a keyboard and create.We must also be both businessman and architect,
ever mindful of building our venerable platforms or risk writing ourselves straight
into obscurity.

We cannot simply stand, or sit, on the hallowed ground which
we inhabit.We must constantly grow our
social networks, tweeting and blogging ourselves above the crowd.We must become experts in our field or our
genre or otherwise.We must build our
mailing lists.We must win the Miss
Congeniality award of the writing pageant to which we all aspire.Our names must be known.We must be, as Glinda so aptly sang to
Elpheba in Wicked, “Popular.”(Or Poppa-LEE-ur,
as Bella used to say.)And we must
be verbal yoginis.We must not only
write our book as a book, we must flex our fingers and twist our prose into pretzel-like
positions, telling our story in one perfect word.Or one sentence.Or three.Or in a paragraph.Or in a one
page synopsis.Or a three-page
synopsis.Or a five-page synopsis.Or in a chapter outline.A scene summary.A proposal.A song.A poem.An essay.An excerpt.A Modern Love
column.I am not kidding.Except for maybe the song and poem part, but
I’m sure some agent out there right now is thinking, “A song? Hmmm…”

And so, in addition to “just” writing a book, I have also
been bending my book into all these shapes in my quest to be not only popular,
but published.Because, just as everyone—including
my soon-to-be-98-years-old-mother-in-law—who has ever said, “Someday I’m going
to write a book,” will learn, writing the damned thing is actually the “easy”
part.And what you probably don’t know
until you’ve fulfilled your threats and finally written that book is that behind
every manuscript lurks a literal Mt. Everest.When you’ve scribbled “The End” and looked up from your laptop screen
for the first time in years, you’ll suddenly notice that a) your kids are gone
and b) you are sitting on a literal false peak.For there, looming before you, lies the real challenge—the snow-capped mountain
of publishing.Strapping on your
sunglasses and tightening your boot laces, you must rise from your chair and
set out anew, clutching your precious manuscript with hope in one hand and
determination in the other.

You will find the path ahead littered with the corpses of writers
who’ve come before you, those who succumbed to the obstacles of rejection and
the elements of dejection, those who had thin skin or got cold feet.Some will have left their footprints as they slogged
back to their day jobs, burning the pages of their dreams alongside the trail for
warmth and choking on the ashes.But if
you can persevere on this path, paving the way for those who follow with the
scattered breadcrumbs of your own essays and rejection letters, you might actually,
eventually arrive at the tippy top of that snowy peak.

And there, just beyond Hillary’s Step, you will find a tiny,
little, teeny-weeny sign post.And if
you can manage to crawl through the final 3,000 feet of elevation
affectionately known as “the death zone” and up, up, up to the 29,029th
foot peak, heaving yourself up with your last bit of energy as your brain
begins to eat itself, you will see that the sign says, “Unless!” No, that’s a
different story.Instead, what you will
find nailed to that piece of weather-beaten wood is a clipboard.And attached to that clipboard will be a flimsy
piece of paper flapping in the jet stream whose infernal triple-digit winds
will threaten to blow it, and you, clear off the mountain any minute now.

But.IF you can
manage to cling to that rickety sign and clutch that piece of paper, squinting
through your snow blindness to decipher the words inscribed in some ancient
Himalayan language known only to the Dalai Lama and a few others that looks
something like this, सगरमाथा, every other word of which sounds suspiciously like the
F-bomb, THEN you will see that it is a contract!From a major publishing house!And it has YOUR name on it followed by a
bunch of legal stuff you wouldn’t understand even without the fog of altitude
sickness.And there, at the bottom, is a
blank line that says, “Sign here.”In
English.Now, you are way above
the tree-line and there is no stick or pencil to be found.Will that stop you?I certainly hope not.Because after all you’ve been through, this,
you see, is the final test.

If you are a real writer, one worthy of the quest, you will
leap this hurdle by gnawing off the end of your fingertip, just as you
have done every single day for all these many, many years as you struggled to
recall Mrs. Petersen’s seventh grade grammar rules, eating your nails for lunch
and wearing your fingertips thin as you erased all traces of letters on your
keyboard, your fingers flying across its smooth plastic surface until they melted
together like the grilled cheese sandwich you wish you had time to make.Yes you, and only you, are equipped to pass this final test.Bite your brittle skin, sign that contract with
your own blood, and receive the holy grail.For then, and only then, will your manuscript realize its dream,
magically transforming before your very eyes into a book.And, then, and only then, will you, yourself,
undergo the final metamorphosis from writer of “Dear Diary” entries to
Author!

Yes, folks, the path from chair to peak is paved with
disappointment.Which you may want to
remember the next time you bite the head off your book group selection. And part of preparing the venerable platform is
submitting essays to various magazines and contests so you can say that you
have been published somewhere, even if it’s only in an anthology called “Moose
on the Loose.”And so it was that I
awoke this morning to read the first email on my Crackberry before the sun had
even thought about shining:

Dear Kelly,

Thanks for sending "Dam It" (yes, the real name) to Osprey Magazine (no, not the real name) -- and forgive me for the amount
of time that has passed since your submission. (four
months) All of us at Osprey Magazine were happy to have the chance to consider the piece,
but I must take credit for the delayed reply. (um, okay, and ?!)

Though we admired many things about the piece, (that’s nice) we unfortunately
must pass. (that’s not)As you know,
Osprey Magazine only publishes six issues a year, (even though you get an email from us
weekly) which means decision-making is always quite difficult.

Thanks again, Kelly (at least he didn’t call me Kitty), for considering Osprey Magazine
as a home for your writing. (but sorry, you’re still homeless)Best wishes for a peaceful and productive
fall.

James Audubon (not his real name)
On behalf of Osprey Magazine's editorial staff

Yes, folks, this is the kind of love letter we “writers”
receive all too often. Or at least I do.
And we’re never supposed to complain,
especially not in a blog we are using to build our platform and can be read on the World Wide Web.Which I’m not.I’m simply sharing, as in show and tell.This is the kind of thing that we are
supposed to celebrate as one more “no” on our way to “yes!”In lieu of gnashing my teeth or
kicking the proverbial dog, I graciously poured myself a cup of coffee and beat
someone at Words With Friends instead.And
then, drowning in caffeine-laced disappointment, I decided to give you all a
little taste of what it takes to be an aspiring author. Now I think I'll go clean a toilet.